The Inventor Of Yo Has Dumbed Down Snapchat With New Camera App Mirage

Monday

Jul 28, 2014 at 10:55 AM

Alyson Shontell

Moshe Hogeg, the brains behind viral notification app Yo and CEO of Israeli communication startup Mobli, has launched a new app called Mirage.

Like Yo, Mirage is a one-button messenger. At a glance, it is a combination of popular apps TapTalk and Snapchat, and it lets you send short disappearing photo or video messages to friends.

But Mirage has a few key innovations that make it arguably better and simpler than either of its predecessors.

Mirage has a split screen that resembles TapTalk and Facebook's Slingshot, where the top half is a camera that can either be front-facing (for selfies) or outward facing, and the bottom half is a list of contacts.

Users can tap once on the screen to change the camera's orientation and twice to add text. They can swipe right to left to add a filter. If they keep swiping, they'll come across a blank white filter that gets rid of the camera and allows the user to send a 15-second audio message or a short text message, picture-free.

Half of the interview with Hogeg for this story was conducted by sending 15-second audio messages back and forth on Mirage.

Messages are ephemeral, like Snapchat's, but Mirage cuts out one critical step from the Snapchat photo-sending process. On Snapchat, the camera is on one screen and a list of contacts is on another. With Mirage, the contact's icon is on the same page as the camera, and pressing it both takes the picture or video and sends the file. It's an innovation that was made popular by TapTalk.

There's no way to group-message users on the app, but Hogeg says that feature is coming soon.

Another key innovation is Mirage allows you to send messages to friends who aren't on the app — and it doesn't pressure them to download it. If you try to send a message to someone who hasn't downloaded Mirage, they'll be sent a link to view the message on Mirage's website. The message disappears from Mirage's website, just like it does on the app.

Inspired by the popularity of Yo, Hogeg gathered a team of six Mobli employees to work on Mirage a month and a half ago. Mobli launched in 2010 with $86 million in funding from A-listers like Leonardo DiCaprio, Tobey Maguire, and billionaire Carlos Slim. Mirage is the first of a few standalone apps Mobli intends to build. The next will likely be a visual search engine Mobli has been working on for the past two years.

Mobli, which was buzzy at launch, has lost momentum in recent years. Its new strategy to spin off potentially viral apps seems to be a last-ditch effort to pivot the fledgling, over-funded startup and revitalize it for the mobile era. It's also a lesson learned from a missed opportunity with Yo.

When Yo launched, Hogeg says he was embarrassed by its simplicity and decided not to put Mobli's brand on it in the App Store. But Yo quickly grew to 2 million downloads and raised $1.5 million at a $5 million to $10 million valuation from investors.

This time, Mirage is wholly owned and operated by Mobli. The goal is to create a suite of simple communication tools.

"The goal of technology and the internet is to move information and make it accessible, and one of the key things we've seen come from it is [improved] communication. People want to talk with each other," Hogeg told Business Insider in a phone interview.

"When we looked at all the different messaging apps, none of them really imitated real-life communication. Most of our conversations get stored only in our memory. We don't need to keep the information ... The only app that’s really serving information like that is Snapchat. But Snapchat is a photo- and video-sharing tool. It’s not a communication tool. I would never communicate with you the way I did now [a conversation back and forth through video and audio messages] on Snapchat."

Here's what a video message looks like on Mirage:

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SEE ALSO: THE INSIDE STORY OF YO: How A 'Stupid' App Attracted Millions Of Dollars And Rocketed To The Top Of The App Store